America Needs One Rulebook for Artificial Intelligence. The TRUMP AMERICA AI Act Would Create It

April 27, 2026

Almost every industrial sector is required to provide goods and services that are safe by design. When you board a plane, buy a coffee pot, visit a theme park, eat at a restaurant, pick up a prescription, or fill up your gas tank, you can rest assured that the company has a duty of care to ensure your safety and prevent foreseeable harm. The one exception: Big Tech.

 

When you log on to a social media site, nothing protects you from harmful product features—and children have paid the biggest price. For years, social media companies have intentionally designed algorithms, push notifications, and endless scrolling to foster addiction among children while exposing them to serious harms, including sexual abuse, drug dealers, and pro-suicide material.

 

Artificial intelligence has only made the problem worse. Bad actors abuse the technology to generate child sexual abuse material, while AI chatbots sexualize children in roleplaying fantasies and even encourage users to commit suicide. Last week, I had the honor of joining survivor parents who have lost their children to Big Tech harms for a rally outside the U.S. Capitol. Their message was clear: Congress must act to protect children in the virtual space to ensure that no other parent has to endure the tragedies they have experienced. 

 

Thankfully, there is more momentum than ever before to finally hold Big Tech accountable following the landmark social media verdicts in California and New Mexico. Last month, I released a discussion draft for the TRUMP AMERICA AI Act—comprehensive legislation that would protect Americans online by creating one rulebook for AI. First and foremost, it would protect children by establishing and enforcing a duty of care. It would also protect creators and their intellectual property rights, shield communities from bearing the costs of AI development, and ensure that AI platforms promote viewpoint diversity—not censorship. This bill answers President Trump’s call for national AI standards and would accomplish the six key objectives outlined in the White House’s AI framework.

 

It should come as no surprise that the legislation is gaining broad support. Last week, I announced a growing coalition behind the discussion draft: advocates for the creative community, including the Recording Industry Association of America, Motion Picture Association, and Nashville Songwriters Association International; child safety advocates, including ParentsSOS Co-Founder Maurine Molak, who lost her 16-year-old son David after he faced relentless bullying online; leading groups for responsible AI innovation, including the AI Policy Network, Alliance for Secure AI, and Americans for Responsible Innovation; and key conservative leaders like Mike Davis of the Article III Project.

 

This coalition has come together because the legislation protects what I call the 4 Cs—children, creators, conservatives, and communities—while ensuring that America wins the global race for AI supremacy.

 

To protect children, the legislation would ban companies from providing AI companion chatbots for minors. It would also include my Kids Online Safety Act to ensure social media platforms are safe for children by default. Eighty-six percent of Americans want tech companies held accountable for their role in the social media addiction crisis, and these provisions would make that happen.

 

To protect creators, the legislation includes my NO FAKES Act to protect artists from unauthorized replications of their work. Last week, I hosted a roundtable with more than 20 creators who made clear that such abuses threaten their very livelihoods, as AI threatens to cut musicians’ incomes by a quarter in the coming years. The bill would also create a federal right for individuals to sue companies for using their data and copyrighted material for AI training without explicit consent. Every American has an Article I, Section 8, Clause 8, constitutional right to benefit from their creative works—and this provision would protect it in the age of AI.

 

To protect conservatives and promote viewpoint diversity, the bill would require high-risk AI systems to undergo regular bias evaluations to prevent discrimination based on protected characteristics, including political affiliation. It would also codify the President’s executive order preventing woke AI in the federal government, ensuring that AI platforms are focused on truth, not political propaganda.

 

To protect communities, the legislation would require data center operators to bear the full cost of all energy and water infrastructure needed for their operations, including construction, maintenance, and upgrades—with no impact on ratepayers. This measure would codify the President’s ratepayer protection pledge, and operators that pass costs on to consumers would be ineligible for federal incentives.

 

While protecting the 4Cs, the legislation would empower AI innovation by promoting partnerships between government, business, and academia to advance AI research and development.

 

The TRUMP AMERICA AI Act gives companies, universities, and researchers the regulatory certainty they need to invest and innovate while ensuring that Americans—their children, their creative work, their voices, and their communities—are protected. The time to act is now.